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on Labor Markets - Supply, Demand, and Wages |
| By: | Freund, Lukas (Boston College); Mann, Lukas (Arizona State University) |
| Abstract: | A central effect of automation is to transform jobs - shifting their task content. We develop a general-equilibrium model of this process. Occupations bundle tasks; workers possess task-specific skills and sort by comparative advantage. When a task is automated, remaining tasks gain in importance, so wage effects depend on workers' full skill profiles. We estimate the distribution of task-specific skills and project individual-level wage effects of generative AI automation. Moderate exposure benefits workers on average but high exposure harms them, with large dispersion within occupations; the return to social skills rises, that to analytical skills falls; and low-earners gain more than high-earners. Job transformation drives these results. |
| Keywords: | AI, bundling, labor markets, skills, task model |
| JEL: | E24 J23 J24 J31 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18565 |
| By: | Astruc--Le Souder, Mael (Bordeaux University); Bargain, Olivier (University of Bordeaux); Locks, Gedeao (DIW, Berlin) |
| Abstract: | As tertiary education expands, employers increasingly rely on academic distinctions to screen among similarly qualified graduates. We study the labor-market effects of honors using administrative and survey data on Sorbonne master's graduates. We exploit France's fixed GPA thresholds for honors assignment to implement a fuzzy regression discontinuity design. Returns are concentrated at the intermediate distinction ("High Honors"), indicating that credentials are most informative when they separate above- from below-average students. We find that High Honors accelerate school-to-work transitions, increasing the monthly job-finding rate by about 40%. Honors also generate an initial wage premium, which fades within two years, and lead to persistent improvements in job quality, including greater access to master's-level positions and faster transitions to permanent contracts. These results highlight the role of academic distinctions as short-run signals that shape early career allocation rather than long-term earnings. |
| Keywords: | signaling, honors, regression discontinuity design, fuzzy RDD |
| JEL: | J23 J24 J31 I23 I28 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18567 |
| By: | Anders Humlum; Emilie Vestergaard |
| Abstract: | We study the early labor market impacts of AI chatbots by linking large-scale adoption surveys to administrative labor market records in Denmark. We document rapid currents: most employers in exposed occupations have adopted chatbot initiatives, workers report productivity benefits, and new AI-related tasks are widespread. Yet these currents have not broken the surface: using difference-in-differences, we estimate precise null effects on earnings and recorded hours at both the worker and workplace levels, ruling out effects larger than 2% two years after the launch of ChatGPT. What moves is the structure of work: employers absorb AI through task reorganization-including new tasks in content generation, AI oversight, and AI integration-and adopters transition into higher-paying occupations where AI chatbots are more relevant, though still too few to move average earnings. Technological change reshapes work well before it surfaces in earnings or hours. |
| Keywords: | Generative AI; Labor Markets |
| JEL: | J23 J24 J31 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26078 |
| By: | Michelle Yin; Hoa Vu; Claudia Persico |
| Abstract: | A rapidly growing literature estimates AI's labor-market effects using large language models (LLMs) to self-assess occupational exposure. We demonstrate these measures are highly fragile. Replicating the dominant rubric with three frontier models on identical tasks, we find a 3.6-fold divergence in mean exposure with agreement as low as 57%. This measurement instability alters downstream empirical conclusions: in a difference-in-differences framework, individual-level coefficient magnitudes vary 2.4-fold across annotators, and county level estimates flip from a significant negative to an insignificant positive depending on annotators. We formalize this non-classical measurement error, highlighting the risks of treating evolving LLMs as static instruments. |
| JEL: | C81 J23 J24 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:35110 |
| By: | Michael Amior; Shmuel San |
| Abstract: | Firms face significant constraints in their ability to differentiate pay by worker productivity. We show how these internal equity constraints generate a quantity-quality trade-off in hiring: firms which offer higher wages attract higher skilled workers, but cannot profitably employ lower skilled workers. In equilibrium, this results in workplace segregation and pay dispersion even among ex-ante identical firms. Our framework provides a novel interpretation of the (empirically successful) log additive AKM wage model, and shows how log additivity can be reconciled with sorting of high-skilled workers to high-paying firms. It can also rationalize a hump-shaped relationship between firm size and firm pay, and provides new insights into aggregate-level, regional and sectoral variation in earnings inequality-which we explore using Israeli administrative data. |
| Keywords: | Wage-setting, monopsony, internal pay equity, workplace segregation, firm size |
| JEL: | J31 J42 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26052 |
| By: | Pascuel Plotkin |
| Abstract: | This paper studies how firm adoption of digital technologies reshapes labor demand and worker earnings. Linking administrative employer-employee records to restaurants and workers from a major delivery platform and using a matched event-study, I show that adopting restaurants substitute in-house labor hours one-for-one with outsourced platform-worker hours. Earnings losses for incumbent workers are modest because displaced workers reallocate to new formal-sector jobs. Exposed non-adopting restaurants are more likely to close, and their workers experience larger losses. I quantify earnings effects across restaurant and platform workers, showing how platform adoption redistributes earnings across workers and creates income outside traditional restaurant employment. |
| Keywords: | Alternative work arrangements, gig economy, technological change, outsourcing, displacement, informality |
| JEL: | J23 J31 J46 O33 L86 J63 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26067 |
| By: | Suphanit Piyapromdee; Tasina Tawichsri; Nada Wasi |
| Abstract: | This paper studies Thailand's 2012-2013 nationwide minimum-wage reform, which raised wage floors by over 40 percent. Using matched employer-employee data, we study its effects on earnings, employment dynamics, and worker-firm sorting. We estimate a discrete type model that jointly captures heterogeneity in wages and mobility across workers and firms. Earnings rise sharply at the bottom with spillovers well above the new minimum, while employment effects are modest and concentrated among the long-term non-employed. Simulations imply sizable gains in discounted lifetime earnings, driven mainly by higher wages but amplified by mobility changes for high-turnover workers. The reform also alters career wage profiles: entry wages increase for low- and mid-wage workers, but tenure-based wage growth flattens most for mid-wage workers, generating an intertemporal trade-off between higher starting pay and slower subsequent progression. Finally, assortative matching weakens as lower-type workers move up the firm wage ladder, yet revealed-preference measures show that wage-based upgrading does not always translate into higher-valued jobs. |
| Keywords: | Minimum wage, worker-firm sorting, job mobility, wage dynamics, matched employer- employee data, revealed preferences, lifetime earnings |
| JEL: | J31 J38 J60 J64 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26060 |
| By: | Rune Vejlin; Jonas Maibom; Malthe Elholm; Jesper Bagger |
| Abstract: | Using Using Danish matched employer-employee data from 1980-2019, this paper shows that rising wage sorting - the correlation between worker and firm wage fixed effects - increased from 0.06 to 0.18 and is driven entirely by employment shifting toward firms that consistently form high‑sorting matches. Individual firms' sorting propensities remain stable. Decomposition reveals that 60% of the increase reflects reallocation among surviving firms, while 40% stems from firm entry and exit. Regression analysis highlights firm turnover and industry shifts as the primary drivers, with rising educational attainment contributing through the concentration of educated workers in high‑sorting firms. Job‑to‑job mobility is the main reallocation mechanism. |
| Keywords: | Inequality, sorting, firm dynamics, firm entry, firm exit, matched employer-employee data |
| JEL: | E24 J21 J31 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26095 |
| By: | Arnaud Dupuy; Morgan Raux; Sara Signorelli |
| Abstract: | Technological change affects labor markets not only by shifting labor demand across occupations, but also by reshaping the skill distances that govern workers' ability to move between jobs. This paper studies the digitalization wave of the 2010s using task data from online job postings, matched employer-employee data, and a gravity framework of occupational mobility. We show that while most occupations became more digital, skill distances converged for some occupation pairs and diverged for others, increasing mobility along some pathways and reducing it along others. Counterfactual simulations show that these frictions are meaningful and slow reallocation out of shrinking occupations. |
| Keywords: | Occupation mobility, Technological change, Matching |
| JEL: | J23 J24 J62 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26062 |
| By: | Clara von Bismarck-Osten |
| Abstract: | Is the public sector losing the most educated to finance, tech, and consulting? Does it act as a Keynesian employment insurer to the less educated? The data constraints behind the limited evidence on this have recently been overcome for England. The probability of entering the public sector rises with education, and this paper documents that this educational gradient has strengthened. Relative to just before the financial crisis, the public sector became a less common workplace for individuals entering the labour market with low levels of education. At the same time, it became a more common destination for the most educated, whether defined by highest qualification, university rank, or final grade. Graduates from top universities do show increased entry into finance, the tech sector, and the consulting industry, but also show-despite a substantial deterioration of pay differentials-an increasing preference for the public sector as an entry-workplace. A decomposition of the trends by graduate discipline and destination industry points to UK-specific policy explanations. |
| Keywords: | Public Sector, Occupational Choice |
| JEL: | J24 J45 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26094 |
| By: | Guillermo Cruces; Diego Fernández Meijide; Sebastian Galiani; Ramiro H. Gálvez; María Lombardi |
| Abstract: | Does generative artificial intelligence (AI) reinforce or reduce productivity differences across workers? Existing evidence largely studies AI within firms and occupations, where organizationalselectioncompresseseducationalheterogeneity, leavingunclearwhetherAI narrows productivity gaps across individuals with substantially different levels of formal education. Weaddressthisquestionusingarandomizedonlineexperimentconductedoutside firms, in which1, 174 adults aged 25–45 with heterogeneous educational backgrounds complete an incentivized, workplace-style business problem-solving task. The task is a general (not domain-specific) exercise, and participants perform it either with or without access to a generative-AI assistant. Unlike prior work that studies heterogeneity within relatively homogeneous worker samples, our designtargets the between–education-group productivity gap as the primary estimand. We find that AI increases productivity for all participants, with substantially larger gains for lower-education individuals. In the absence of AIaccess, higher-education participants outperform lower-education participants by0.548standarddeviations; withAIaccess, thisgapfallsto0.139standarddeviations, implying that generative AI closes three-quarters of the initial productivity gap. We interpret this pattern as evidence that generative AI narrows effective productivity differences in task execution by relaxing constraints that are more binding for lower-education individuals, even though underlying skill differences remain, as reflected in persistent education gaps in task performance and in a follow-up exercise without AI assistance. |
| Keywords: | Productivity, artificial intelligence, education, human capital, inequality |
| JEL: | J24 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:udt:wpgobi:wp_gob_2026_03 |
| By: | Claudio Schilter; Samuel Lüthi; Stefan C. Wolter |
| Abstract: | We merge experimental data on competitiveness of a large sample of students with their complete educational history for up to ten years after the initial assessment. Exploiting quasi-random class assignments and controlling for other non-cognitive peer characteristics, we find that having competitive peers as classmates makes students choose and secure positions in higher-paying occupations. These occupations are also more challenging and-among male students-more popular. On the cost side, competitive peers do not lead to a lower probability of graduating from the subsequent job-specific education, but they significantly increase the probability of requiring extra time to do so. |
| Keywords: | Peer effects, competitiveness, occupational choice |
| JEL: | C93 D91 J24 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26058 |
| By: | Fenella Carpena; Simon Galle |
| Abstract: | Motivated by the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), we set up a quantitative general-equilibrium model of the labor market impact of occupation-specific technical change. The highly tractable model crystallizes how three fundamental forces shape the impact of technical change on the occupational wage distribution: the input substitution elasticity, the final demand elasticity, and the labor supply (reallocation) elasticity. The difference between the former two elasticities determines whether machines and workers are gross complements, while the reallocation elasticity governs the magnitude of the distributional effects. We estimate the reallocation elasticities from group-by-occupation specialization changes, allowing for asymmetric reallocation and associated ripple effects on wages across occupations. After combining these estimates with externally disciplined demand and substitution parameters, as well as AI exposure measures, we shed light on the aggregate and distributional effects of occupation-specific advances in AI: wages in administrative services grow the least, ripple effects on less exposed occupations are substantial, AI modestly compresses the returns to education, and, on average, disproportionately benefits lower-income groups. |
| Keywords: | Technical change, labor reallocation, wage inequality, occupational heterogeneity, artificial intelligence, large language models |
| JEL: | J23 J24 E24 E25 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26039 |
| By: | Cassandra Merrit (Keough School of Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame); Jacob Dominski (Institute for Ethics and the Common Good, University of Notre Dame); Christopher Hoy (Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research) |
| Abstract: | Artificial intelligence (AI) is frequently cast as a transformative technology that will raise productivity while displacing human work, yet organizational adoption remains uneven and aggregate effects are mixed. We examine whether middle managers contribute to this gap by acting as gatekeepers to AI adoption. In a pre-registered survey experiment of 2, 000 managers in the United States and United Kingdom, respondents were randomly assigned to view videos summarizing recent evidence on AI’s productivity benefits, its labor-displacing potential, or a placebo control. Exposure to information about labor displacement leads to a large reduction in intended AI adoption and advocacy (by 0.4–0.5 standard deviations) and a moderate reduction in staffing intentions (by 0.2 standard deviations). In contrast, information about productivity benefits has no significant average effect, although it increases advocacy among managers with low prior familiarity with AI. These findings indicate that middle managers’ responses to the information environment shape both technology adoption and employment intentions. Rather than inducing substitution away from labor and toward AI, information about AI’s labor-displacing potential leads managers to scale back both planned AI adoption and their staffing intentions. |
| Keywords: | Artificial Intelligence, Technology adoption, Managers, Gatekeepers, Productivity, Labor displacement |
| JEL: | J23 J24 O33 L2 M54 D83 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iae:iaewps:wp2026n02 |
| By: | Todd Morris; Stefan Staubli; Benoit Dostie |
| Abstract: | We evaluate the welfare effects of five provincial mandatory retirement bans in Canada from 2005 to 2009 using linked employer-employee tax data. The bans sharply reduce retirements at age 65, with sizable announcement effects and heterogeneity across industries. Post-65 employment and earnings rise at least 14%, with gains comparable to a two-year increase in pension-eligibility ages. Older workers save more and spouses postpone retirement, benefiting public finances, with no observable effects on mortality or younger workers. Highly exposed firms reduce payroll costs via hiring adjustments while maintaining worker productivity and profitability. Our results suggest that protecting older workers was welfare-improving. |
| JEL: | H55 J26 J78 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:35111 |
| By: | Francesca Miserocchi; Savannah Noray; Alice Wu |
| Abstract: | The advances of artificial intelligence (AI) are built on the groundwork laid by researchers. We study the labor market competition between academia and industry for AI researchers and its consequences for public knowledge production. Using data on 150, 000 computer science researchers, we document a major reallocation of AI talent toward top technology firms between 2005 and 2020. Publications at AI conferences predict transitions to top firms more strongly than to academia. Exploiting acceptance decisions at a leading AI conference, we compare accepted authors with similar rejected authors and find that a publication increases the probability of moving to a top firm by 2-6 percentage points in the next 1-3 years. Sorting to top firms is stronger for male researchers, whereas female students and postdocs are more likely to get tenure-track positions following a publication. Researchers who move to top firms subsequently publish fewer papers, resulting in approximately 1, 000 fewer AI papers and 2, 000 fewer papers in other computer science areas per year in the public domain. |
| Keywords: | Sorting, Productivity Signals, Labor Market Concentration, Innovation |
| JEL: | J23 J24 O31 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26106 |
| By: | Estefan, Alejandro (University of Notre Dame); Gerhard, Roberto (Secretaría del Trabajo y Previsión Social); Kaboski, Joseph (University of Notre Dame, CEPR, NBER); Kondo, Illenin (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis); Qian, Wei (Haverford College) |
| Abstract: | Using Mexican economic census data from 1994 to 2019, we document a rising trend in domestic outsourcing, particularly among large firms, and a negative association between outsourcing and labor compensation, including profit sharing and social security. We leverage higher-frequency data from a manufacturing panel survey, matched employer-employee data, and a ban on domestic outsourcing in 2021 to show that the ban reduced outsourcing, increased labor's share, and reduced markdowns without raising total labor costs or affecting employment, output, or productivity. We propose a theoretical model in which corporate fiscal incentives drive outsourcing and account for the observed empirical patterns. |
| Keywords: | markdowns, monopsony, outsourcing, developing countries |
| JEL: | J38 J42 J81 M55 O15 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18566 |
| By: | Pedro C. Sant'Anna; Sulin Sardoschau; Aiko Schmeisser |
| Abstract: | Empirical studies of racial wage disparities typically rely on self-reported race and treat racial categories as fixed. This paper shows that racial classification in the labor market is produced by social perception, and that modeling this perception process is essential for measuring wage gaps. We combine two large-scale administrative data sets to construct three racial identity measures for 330, 000 workers in Brazil between 2003 and 2015: employer classification, self-identification, and an algorithmic skin-tone measure extracted from photographs. In over 20 percent of cases, self-identified and employer-ascribed race do not match, and employers disagree in their classification of the same worker. To quantify how race is constructed, we estimate a "race function" describing how employers map phenotypic cues, self-identification, local context, education, and employment histories into racial categories, showing that productivity-relevant factors shape perceptions. Holding skin tone constant, university graduates are 10 percentage points more likely to be perceived as White. Education whitens even conditional on self-declared race and within firm-by-occupation cells. Measured wage disparities differ depending on whether race is self-reported, employer-ascribed, or skin-tone based, and accounting for racial perceptions substantially changes estimated wage gaps. We show that conventional approaches overstate the role of productivity differences in explaining racial wage gaps. |
| Keywords: | Race, identity, disparity, wage gap, Brazil |
| JEL: | J15 J50 J71 Z10 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26074 |
| By: | Michael A. Clemens |
| Abstract: | The US government in 2025 imposed a $100, 000 tax on each high-skill foreign worker entering with an H-1B work visa. The only public economic justification calculates the tax to offset an estimated wage penalty for H-1B workers relative to US natives. But this estimate suffers from substantial bias. Reexamining the same data shows that H-1B workers receive a modest wage premium relative to comparable natives, roughly 6 percent on average-inconsistent with any wage penalty-when using equivalent wage concepts and comparing workers of the same age, gender, education, and tenure, in the same occupation and local labor market. I trace most of the discrepancy to four methodological choices that inflate the prior estimate: 1) undisclosed imputation of missing data, 2) pooling of non-contemporaneous years, 3) a definition of local labor markets contradicting standard economic practice and US law, and 4) failure to consider H-1B workers' low job tenure. The remaining discrepancy arises from comparing incompatible wage concepts for H-1B versus native workers. Beyond measurement, the theory of public economics implies that a revenue-maximizing immigration tax reduces welfare relative to alternative policies, even with zero weight for immigrant welfare. |
| Keywords: | migration, migrant, immigrant, immigration, earnings, wages, taxes, tariffs, barriers, restrictions, skill, skilled, h-1b, welfare, native, citizen, college, stem, worker, foreign, labor, labour |
| JEL: | J08 J38 J68 H21 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26072 |
| By: | Jaime Arellano-Bover; Carolina Bussotti; Matteo Paradisi; Liangjie Wu |
| Abstract: | Brand capital-an intangible asset that differentiates a firm's products-has grown in recent decades, alongside the rise of intangible investments and the decline in the labor share. Trademarks are legal claims on brand capital and are actively traded across firms, providing a setting to study how reallocating brand capital reshapes firm behavior and aggregate outcomes. Leveraging a novel link of Italian administrative data on trademark ownership, firms' financial statements, and employer-employee records, we exploit firm-to-firm trademark transactions to identify the effects of brand-capital investments. Guided by a model in which firms combine production labor, expansionary labor, and brand capital, we use an event-study design to estimate firm-level effects and quantify their aggregate implications. Acquiring a trademark increases intangible assets by 19%, sales by 8%, and employment by 6%, while leaving weekly earnings unchanged and reducing the firm-level labor share. Employment gains are concentrated among marketing and sales workers, indicating that brand capital is not skill-neutral. Accounting for both buyers and sellers, trademark transactions reallocate brand capital toward larger firms, raising sales and lowering the labor share. Calibrating the model to our estimates, we find that this reallocation generates a one percentage-point decline in the aggregate labor share in the long run. |
| Keywords: | Brand capital, trademarks, labor share, labor demand, markups |
| JEL: | L25 O34 E25 J23 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26079 |
| By: | Ugur Aytun (Department of Economics, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey); Eren Gurer (Department of Economics, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey); Erol Taymaz (Department of Economics, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey) |
| Abstract: | In December 2017, the government of T¨ urkiye announced a comprehensive ban on the procurement of outsourced services by public institutions and mandated that all workers providing such services on-site be transitioned into permanent public positions within six months. We study the labor-market consequences of this abrupt and large-scale policy change using an administrative, linked employer–employee dataset. We find that workers who transitioned into public employment experienced higher wages and improved job security. At the firm level, private service providers with greater exposure to the reform faced higher exit rates and, if they survived, declines in employment, productivity, and profitability. In contrast, municipal-owned enterprises that internalized service provision became more productive and profitable. We also document modest positive wage spillovers in local labor markets. Overall, our results suggest that the outsourcing ban reallocated rents away from private service providers toward workers and public employers. |
| Keywords: | public employment, outsourcing reform, labor market spillovers, firm dynamics, productivity |
| JEL: | J31 J38 J62 L33 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:met:wpaper:2602 |
| By: | Susan Athey; Lisa K. Simon; Oskar Nordström Skans; Johan Vikström; Yaroslav Yakymovych |
| Abstract: | Using rich Swedish administrative data, we apply causal machine learning methods to study how earnings losses after job displacement vary with observable characteristics that may be relevant for targeting policy interventions for workers. Heterogeneity in effects is as large within as across worker groups defined by age and schooling, and as large within as across establishments. A substantial portion of cross-establishment heterogeneity can be explained by industry and local labor market characteristics, suggesting a role for place- and industry-based targeting. The largest losses are concentrated among already vulnerable workers, indicating that well-designed targeting policies can improve both efficiency and equity. |
| Keywords: | Plant closures, heterogeneous effects, GRF |
| JEL: | J65 J21 J31 C45 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26075 |
| By: | Gabriele Lucchetti |
| Abstract: | I document that the city-size earnings premium is smaller for immigrants than for natives, driven by low-income-country immigrants, who sort less into cognitive occupations in larger cities. I interpret these facts through a spatial equilibrium model with heterogeneous human capital, amenities, and local earnings wedges. Local earnings wedges are the main channel behind the immigrant-native gap in the city-size earnings premium. Removing all immigrant-native differences closes 62 percent of the immigrant-native earnings gap but widens the spatial earnings gap by 20 percent. Expanding college immigration narrows the workers' earnings gap without widening the spatial earnings gap. |
| Keywords: | Immigrant Earnings Gap, City-Size Earnings Premium, Spatial Equilibrium, Occupational Sorting, Human Capital |
| JEL: | F22 J24 J31 J61 R13 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26082 |
| By: | Gaia Dossi; Marta Morando |
| Abstract: | We link U.S. patent and inventor records to individual voter register files and map politically polarized policy issues to related technologies. Compared to Republicans, Democrats are one-third more likely to patent technologies addressing climate-change mitigation or women's reproductive health, and one-third less likely to patent weapons and related technologies. These gaps are not explained by differences in inventive ability or by sorting across organizations or teams. Party-technology alignment has strengthened over the past two decades, a period of rising political polarization in U.S. society. Technology diffusion is also politically polarized: Democrats are more likely than Republicans to cite aligned technologies and less likely to cite misaligned ones. Together, these findings are consistent with political polarization and societal views being important drivers of the direction and diffusion of technological change and operating, at least in part, through inventors' technology choices, with implications for innovation policy. |
| Keywords: | Diffusion, Innovation, Partisanship, Polarization, Technology |
| JEL: | D72 I10 J24 O31 O33 O44 P00 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26064 |
| By: | Giuseppe Pulito; Mariola Pytlikova; Sarah Schroeder; Magnus Lodefalk |
| Abstract: | Using two waves of nationally representative Danish firm surveys linked to employer-employee administrative registers, we study how adoption varies across artificial intelligence (AI) and related advanced technologies. We show that AI adoption is highly technology-specific. While firm size and digital infrastructure predict adoption broadly, workforce composition operates through distinct channels: STEM-educated workforces predict core AI adoption, whereas non-STEM university-educated workforces are associated with generative AI adoption, indicating different human capital complementarities. The factors associated with adoption differ from those predicting deployment breadth: firm size and digital maturity matter for both, whereas workforce composition primarily predicts adoption alone. Machine learning and natural language processing are deployed across multiple business functions, whereas other advanced technologies remain concentrated in specific operational domains. Individual-level evidence provides a foundation for these patterns, with awareness of workplace AI usage concentrated among managers and high-skilled workers. Self-reported AI knowledge is higher among younger and more educated individuals. Finally, commonly used occupational AI exposure measures vary substantially in their ability to predict observed adoption, with benchmark-based measures outperforming patent-based and LLM-focused alternatives. These findings show that treating AI as a monolithic category obscures economically meaningful variation in who adopts, what they deploy, and how well existing measures capture it. |
| Keywords: | Artificial Intelligence; Technology Adoption; Digitalisation; Human capital; AI Exposure Measures |
| JEL: | D24 J23 J62 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26089 |
| By: | Mark Borgschulte; Heepyung Cho; Darren Lubotsky |
| Abstract: | We examine the differential effects of minimum wages on immigrant and native workers in the United States. We find that minimum wage increases lead to reduced hours of work among immigrants with no effect on their employment. The effects are concentrated among recently-arrived, likely-undocumented workers in high turnover industries. Native workers show no such response, even when examining native subgroups with similar characteristics to the most affected immigrants. We conclude that affected immigrant labor markets feature low-surplus, low-investment employment relationships with flexible hours, but they are embedded in labor markets where replacement is unusually costly. |
| Keywords: | Immigrants, minimum wage, employment, hours of work, labor hoarding |
| JEL: | J08 J15 J38 J42 J61 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26103 |
| By: | Rune Vejlin; Hans Sigaard; Michael Svarer; Anne Katrine Borgbjerg |
| Abstract: | This paper estimates the effect of a reform-induced increase in the early retirement age (ERA) on labor supply, health, and healthcare utilization using detailed Danish administrative data and a regression discontinuity design. We show that while raising the ERA successfully increased employment, it also led to spillovers into other public transfers and increased the number of self-supporting individuals. We find that the increased ERA led to small and insignificant effects on GP visits and the use of painkillers, as well as borderline significant, small positive effects on the use of antidepressants and CVD medicine. Further analysis shows that individuals who were employed due to the reform had lower pre-reform income and wealth, while the individuals who were not employed despite being affected by the reform were characterized by worse health before the reform announcement. We argue that possibilities for exiting employment serve as a potentially important mitigating mechanism for health and healthcare utilization effects by sorting vulnerable individuals out of employment. |
| Keywords: | retirement reforms, health, healthcare utilization |
| JEL: | I18 J18 J26 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26046 |
| By: | Xiao Ma; Alejandro Nakab; Camila Navajas-Ahumada; Daniela Vidart |
| Abstract: | Women experience slower wage growth than men over their lifetimes, a gap often attributed to the “motherhood wage penalty, ” as childbearing reduces earnings. This paper links this penalty to differences in human capital using a pseudo-event study of first childbirth in Europe to document a “motherhood training penalty.” Before parenthood, full-time male and female workers exhibit similar on-the-job training trends, but their trajectories diverge afterward. In the first 1–3 years of parenthood, women are 17%–21% less likely to train, compared to a 1%–5% decline for men. Additional evidence suggests this gap reflects employers’ lower willingness to finance training for mothers, and that it is larger in countries with higher childcare costs and weaker government support for training. |
| Keywords: | On-the-Job Training, Human Capital Accumulation, Lifecycle Wage Growth, Gender Gaps |
| JEL: | J24 J16 M53 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:udt:wpgobi:wp_gob_2026_04 |
| By: | Bonilla, Leonardo (Banco de la República); Munoz-Morales, Juan (IESEG School of Management); Zarate, Roman (UCSD) |
| Abstract: | This paper examines how import liberalization affects labor markets when labor and intermediate inputs can act as complements or substitutes. We incorporate a CES production function into a dynamic quantitative trade model and show that the labor market effects of imports depend on the elasticity of substitution between labor and intermediate inputs, which varies across sectors. Exploiting exogenous tariff reductions in Colombia and applying a difference-in-differences strategy, we separate the reduced-form effects of trade into an input shock and a competition shock. Import competition reduces the wage bill across sectors, whereas cheaper intermediate inputs increase it. This increase is driven by the service sector, with imprecise effects in manufacturing and an opposite-sign effect in agriculture. Combining the model with the reduced-form parameters, we implement indirect inference to recover sector-specific elasticities of substitution and find that labor and intermediates are substitutes in agriculture and manufacturing but complements in services. Allowing for a more flexible production structure meaningfully changes the labor market response to trade. |
| Keywords: | trade liberalization, import competition, foreign inputs, employment, earnings |
| JEL: | J21 J30 F14 O15 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18558 |
| By: | Checchi, Daniele (University of Milan); Defraja, Gianni (University of Nottigham); Marra, Alfredo (University of Milano-Bicocca); Verzillo, Stefano (European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC)) |
| Abstract: | We investigate the impact of a reform introduced in Italy in 2010 (Law 240/2010, known as the Gelmini reform) that aimed to liberalise external economic activities for academics, whose pay had been effectively frozen for the previous seven years. The reform partially liberalised remunerated external activities while simultaneously restructuring university governance to expand institutional autonomy and strengthen central assessment of academic performance. Using administrative data from a representative sample of Italian academics, we compute both extensive (participation) and intensive (incidence relative to salary) margins of external activities. Our main finding is that the reform did not alter the behaviour of Italian academics. Among the possible explanations, we suggest the substantial leeway to restrict academics' remunerated external activities enjoyed by universities' administration under the new governance framework and the interpretations in the Court of Auditors, which also restricted the range of permissible activities. |
| Keywords: | academics, monetary incentive, Italy |
| JEL: | J33 K31 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18561 |
| By: | Pauline Carry |
| Abstract: | This paper examines the effects of working time regulations on the allocation of workers and hours. I exploit a unique reform introducing a minimum workweek of 24 hours in France in 2014, affecting 15% of jobs. Drawing on administrative data and an event study design, I find a firm-level reduction in total hours worked, showing imperfect substitutability between workers and hours. The effects differ by gender: women working part-time were replaced by men working longer hours. Importantly, workers also reallocate between firms. To quantify the aggregate impact accounting for these effects, I build and estimate a search and matching model with firm and worker heterogeneity. Overall, the minimum workweek reduced employment by 1.4%, largely driven by women, and decreased total hours by 0.5%. |
| Keywords: | Working time regulations, Hours of work, Reallocation effects, Gender inequality |
| JEL: | J08 J23 J41 E24 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26071 |
| By: | Anna Pestova; Alexander Popov |
| Abstract: | We document persistent human capital scarring among the children of homeowners who reached college age during the 2008–2011 housing bust. Negative shocks to parental housing wealth substantially reduced college attendance among first-year college-age children of homeowners, relative to their counterparts from renter households. In regions experiencing the largest declines in housing wealth, the educational gap between the offspring of homeowners and renters persisted for at least a decade. The shortfall in human capital accumulation translated into lower long-run employability, particularly in education-intensive sectors, and resulted in lower earnings among the affected cohort. |
| Keywords: | Homeownership, housing wealth, human capital, housing boom-bust episodes |
| JEL: | I24 E32 J24 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cer:papers:wp817 |
| By: | Francesco Del Prato; Salvatore Lattanzio |
| Abstract: | Men experience workplace injuries at roughly twice the rate of women. We study whether compensating differentials for injury risk contribute to gender differences in firm pay policies. We develop a search model that microfounds an AKM wage equation, decomposing firm pay effects into productivity and injury-risk components. Using Italian matched employer-employee data with individual injury records, we estimate gender-specific firm wage effects and firm-level injury risk. We find that injury-related channels account for 8 percent of the gender gap in firm wage effects, rising to 17 percent in manufacturing. While women receive only 86 percent of men's wage response to firm-level injury risk, conditioning on broad occupation eliminates this within-firm disparity. This indicates that the injury channel reflects sorting across firms and occupational allocation within firms, rather than differential pricing of identical risk. |
| Keywords: | Gender wage gap, workplace injuries, compensating differentials, AKM, rent sharing |
| JEL: | J16 J28 J31 J64 J71 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26081 |
| By: | Bloom, Nicholas (Stanford University); Dahl, Gordon (University of California, San Diego); Rooth, Dan-Olof (Stockholm University) |
| Abstract: | There has been a dramatic rise in disability employment since the pandemic. At the same time, work from home (WFH) has risen four-fold. This paper asks whether the two are causally related. Controlling for compositional changes and labor market tightness, a 1 percentage point increase in WFH increases full-time employment by 1.0% for individuals with a physical disability. The postpandemic increase in working from home explains 68%-85% of the rise in full-time employment. Wage data suggests that WFH increased the supply of workers with a physical disability, likely by reducing commuting costs and enabling better control of working conditions. |
| Keywords: | work from home, disability employment |
| JEL: | J14 J42 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18555 |
| By: | Anna Stansbury; Kyra Rodriguez |
| Abstract: | Unlike gender or race, class background is rarely a focus of research on career progression, or of DEI efforts in elite occupations. Should it be? In this paper we document a large class gap in career progression in one occupation - US tenure-track academia - using parental education to proxy for class background. First-generation college graduates are 10% less likely to be tenured at an R1, are tenured at institutions ranked 11% lower, earn 3% less, and report 5% lower job satisfaction, than their former PhD classmates (from the same institution and field) with a parent with a non-PhD graduate degree. Neither selection out of academia nor different preferences explain this gap; differential research productivity also plays little role. Instead, likely drivers are differences in cultural and social capital. We also find a class gap in career progression for PhDs who work in industry, suggesting this phenomenon generalizes outside academia. |
| Keywords: | class; socioeconomic background; mobility; discrimination |
| JEL: | J7 J44 J31 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26042 |
| By: | Adhvaryu, Achyuta; Nyshadham, Anant; Tamayo, Jorge Andrés; Molina, Teresa; Bhalotra, Sonia |
| Abstract: | Using administrative and survey data from a large restaurant chain in Colombia, we documented gender differences in the managerial approaches most strongly associated with performance. Based on these findings, we designed two customized curricula: a relationship-based curriculum highlighting characteristics exemplified by high-performing female managers and a task- and metric-based curriculum emphasizing characteristics exemplified by high-performing male managers. Both curricula also included training on universally effective practices. We then implemented a randomized controlled trial in which stores were assigned to a control group, a relationship curriculum group, or a task and metric curriculum group. Managers assigned to the relationship-focused curriculum demonstrate significantly larger improvements on relationship-related questions than do those assigned to the task-focused curriculum, while the reverse is true for task-related questions. Importantly, these targeted gains do not come at the expense of general learning: managers in both treatment groups also demonstrate improvements in questions covering content common to both curricula. Follow-up data collection will measure treatment effects on store- and worker-level outcomes. |
| JEL: | L20 M50 J24 L66 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:idb:brikps:14570 |
| By: | Boeri, Tito (Bocconi University); Crescioli, Tommaso (Prometeia); Garnero, Andrea (OECD); Luisetto, Lorenzo (Cleveland State University) |
| Abstract: | Can collective bargaining mitigate monopsony power? This paper addresses this question by examining how the regulation of noncompete agreements for employees by collective agreements affects firm-level markdowns in the French manufacturing sector. Using a staggered difference-in-differences approach, we find that the regulation of noncompetes set by collective agreements leads to a 1.3%-2.2% reduction in markdowns on average. The effect grows over time and is more pronounced for smaller, less productive firms that pay lower wages. Studying a landmark decision of the French Supreme Court that introduced the obligation to have a compensation to consider a noncompete enforceable, we find a significant complementarity between the regulation of noncompetes at the national level (e.g., via case law) and sectoral collective bargaining. By enhancing compliance or imposing further restrictions, collective bargaining can serve as an effective tool to regulate the use of noncompete agreements. |
| Keywords: | monoposony, unions, noncompetes |
| JEL: | J42 J51 J53 J58 J31 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18564 |
| By: | Pereira, João; Ramos, Raul; Martins, Pedro S. |
| Abstract: | We propose a simple and novel approach to estimate the cyclicality of gaps using cross-sectional data. Our method controls for composition effects in contexts in which panel data cannot be leveraged. Our method also provides useful insights for assessing common trends in difference-in-differences analyses. We illustrate the approach studying the gender wag gap (GWG) in Portugal, finding that it is generally procyclical, except at the top of the distribution. This procyclicality stems from the unexplained component of the GWG rather than from differences in observed characteristics. The results also do not support the hypothesis that GWG cyclicality is driven by discrimination. |
| Keywords: | Wage decompositions, Gender gaps, Wage cyclicality, Discrimination |
| JEL: | J31 E32 J16 J71 J82 |
| Date: | 2026 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:glodps:1746 |
| By: | Martin Olsson; Fredrik Heyman |
| Abstract: | This paper examines how automation shapes intergenerational income mobility. Using Swedish register data on parents and children from 1985 to 2019, we study how parental exposure to robots at the occupational and industry level during the 1990s affected children's outcomes up to thirty years later. To address selection, we match parents on detailed worker, firm, and family characteristics and complement this with firm-level variation based on robot and broader automation imports. We also employ two IV strategies that leverage exogenous variation in automation adoption: one based on foreign industry-level robot adoption, and another exploiting differences in managerial education at the firm level. Our results show that parental exposure to robotization and automation reduces children's income and upward mobility, and leads to worse long-run labor market and educational outcomes. These effects are concentrated among low-income families. Evidence suggests that parental labor market shocks and financial strain are key mechanisms. Taken together, the findings indicate that technological change can reduce intergenerational mobility and contribute to long-run inequality. |
| Keywords: | Intergenerational Mobility; Robots; Automation; Inequality |
| JEL: | J31 J62 O33 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26047 |
| By: | Plüghan, Oliver; Rehfeld, Katharina-Maria |
| Abstract: | This paper investigates the methodological performance of Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regression and Random Forest machine learning algorithms in measuring adjusted gender pay gaps. The research is motivated by the European Union's Pay Transparency Directive (2023/970), which mandates that employers report adjusted gender pay gaps. While Oaxaca-Blinder Decomposition and the underlying OLS regression have served as the industry standard for gap estimation, this paper examines whether machine learning approaches can better capture complex, nonlinear compensation relationships. Using synthetic datasets with controlled discrimination parameters, the study compares both methods across two sample sizes and multiple discrimination scenarios. Key findings demonstrate that both methods successfully distinguish between occupational segregation and direct wage discrimination at large sample sizes. However, at smaller sample sizes, Random Forest exhibits substantial instability whereas OLS remains slightly more stable. A methodological adjustment, training Random Forest on the larger population before applying predictions to subsets substantially improves small-sample performance. The paper concludes that OLS regression remains preferable for formal regulatory compliance due to its interpretability and stability, while Random Forest can serve as a complementary validation tool for largescale analysis. |
| Keywords: | Gender Pay Gap, Pay Transparency, OLS Regression, Random Forest, Wage Discrimination, Unexplained Wage Gap, Adjusted Gender Pay Gap |
| JEL: | J16 J31 J71 M52 C13 C45 |
| Date: | 2026 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:iubhhr:340172 |
| By: | Sarah Cattan; Gabriella Conti; Christine Farquharson |
| Abstract: | Early childhood programmes frequently lose effectiveness at scale, yet the role of the workforce remains poorly understood. We document substantial heterogeneity in workforce effectiveness in England's national home-visiting programme for first-time teenage mothers, despite a highly-structured curriculum and well-qualified staff. Exploiting quasi-random assignment of mothers to family nurses, we estimate that a one standard deviation increase in workforce effectiveness raises children's cognitive and socio-emotional development by 0.20-0.23 SD. Structural quality — observable worker characteristics — does not predict effectiveness, but process quality — how visits are delivered — does. Greater effectiveness is linked with improvements in maternal mental health and risk behaviours. |
| Keywords: | early childhood development, home visiting, workforce quality, process quality, scalings, family nurse partnership |
| JEL: | I18 I38 J13 J24 |
| Date: | 2026 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_12619 |
| By: | Alex Bryson; Antti Kauhanen; Petri Rouvinen |
| Abstract: | Utilizing nationally representative cross-sectional and longitudinal data from Finland (2018-2023), we provide a population-level assessment of the relationship between AI and worker well-being. Contrary to international evidence suggesting a positive or an inverted U-shaped relationship, we find no systematic association between AI use intensity and job satisfaction. However, we do find that work engagement is higher among employees who are personally involved with AI, with the strongest association among intensive users for whom AI is an essential part of their work. Furthermore, technology-replacement fears have remained stable despite rapid AI advancement and do not predict subsequent labour market transitions. An interpretation is that Finland's high-trust institutional environment and robust social safety nets may effectively moderate the disruptive psychological and economic shocks typically associated with rapid technological change. |
| Keywords: | Artificial intelligence, job satisfaction, work engagement, technology-related fears, labour market transitions |
| JEL: | J28 L23 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26108 |
| By: | Patrice Laroche; Alex Bryson; Heather Joshi; David Wilkinson |
| Abstract: | Ours is the first meta-analysis synthesizing results from econometric studies carried out in the UK to assess the size of the gender wage gap (GWG). Drawing on 90 primary studies published between 1974 and 2024 we assess trends in the gap and identify the substantive and methodological factors that explain variance in results across studies. Expressed relative to men's earnings, the raw GWG averages 25 log points but falls to 13 log points when adjusting for covariates. There has been convergence in the mean wages of men and women at a rate of about 0.3 percentage points per annum, most of which reflects change in the characteristics of workers and their treatment in the labour market rather than differences over time in study characteristics. There is substantial heterogeneity in the size of the GWG by year of observation, worker type and research design, although differences in the size of adjusted GWG by study design are not as large as most economists might imagine. |
| Keywords: | gender wage gap, meta-analysis, UK |
| JEL: | J16 J31 J71 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26086 |
| By: | Virginia Minni; Kieu-Trang Nguyen; Heather Sarsons; Carla Srebot |
| Abstract: | This paper studies how managers' gender attitudes shape workplace culture and gender inequality. Using data from a multinational firm operating in over 100 countries, we leverage cross-country manager rotations to identify the effects of male managers' gender attitudes on gender pay gaps within a team. Managers from countries with one standard deviation more progressive gender attitudes reduce the pay gap by 5 percentage points (18%), largely through higher promotion rates for women. These effects persist after managers rotate out and are strongest in more conservative countries. Managers with progressive attitudes also influence the local office culture, as local managers who interact with but are not under the purview of the foreign manager begin to have smaller pay gaps in their teams. Our evidence points to individual managers as critical in shaping corporate culture. |
| Keywords: | managers, gender gaps, corporate culture, multinationals |
| JEL: | J16 J24 F23 M14 M5 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26040 |
| By: | Gehrke, Esther (Wageningen University) |
| Abstract: | We examine how shocks to migration opportunities affect schooling outcomes in origin communities. We focus on the migration between Mexico and the United States, and exploit the expansion of the Secure Communities program in the US - a federal data-sharing program that substantially increased the risk of deportation for illegal migrants - as exogenous shock to the attractiveness of illegal migration. Our results suggest that the Secure Communities program increased attendance, enrollment, and educational attainment in municipalities that had stronger migration network links with counties in the US that adopted the program early-on relative to municipalities that had ties with US counties that introduced the policy somewhat later. These results are consistent with the interpretation that the Secure Communities program raised the returns to education for prospective migrants by making low-skill migration to the US less attractive. |
| Keywords: | migration, human capital, Mexico |
| JEL: | I26 J22 O15 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18570 |
| By: | Matthias Fahn; Jin Li; Chang Sun |
| Abstract: | We study how AI affects compensation and job design when performance depends on workers' non-contractible effort. In a principal–agent model with limited liability, AI reduces effort costs but disproportionately lowers the cost of achieving satisfactory performance. This raises the incentive cost of sustaining high effort and can induce firms to replace high-wage, high-effort good jobs with low-wage, low-effort bad jobs, even when good jobs create more total surplus. As a result, AI can lower wages, reduce worker welfare, and even depress profits. If workers can adopt AI unilaterally, adoption occurs even when the resulting equilibrium harms both parties; when adoption requires worker cooperation, resistance is strongest where AI erodes rents embodied in good jobs. In a search-and-matching extension, endogenous outside options amplify these forces, reinforcing a bad-job economy and potentially reducing employment. |
| Keywords: | artificial intelligence, agency costs, job design, labor contracts, limited liability, incentives, search and matching |
| JEL: | D86 J41 O33 L23 |
| Date: | 2026 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_12612 |
| By: | Bastien Chabé-Ferret (Middlesex University & IZA@LISER); Zainab Iftikhar (University of Bonn & CEPR); JungJae Park (Yonsei University) |
| Abstract: | This paper quantifies the contributions of social norms and economic incentives to the 350-hour annual gap in maternal labor supply between East and West Germany. Using a collective model of family formation and labor supply estimated on GSOEP data from 2000–2017, we find that the working-mother stigma accounts for 73 percent of the gap. Economic factors partially offset the norm: higher Western wages raise the opportunity cost of staying home, so equalizing wages in West to the levels in East would nearly double the gap. We show that standard policy reforms may actually widen the regional disparity, and that their effectiveness is conditional on the norm being present: once removed, the same policies have negligible effects. |
| Keywords: | Social norms, economic incentives, marriage, cohabitation, working mothers |
| JEL: | J01 J08 J12 J13 J22 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ajk:ajkdps:405 |
| By: | Berniell, Inés; Berniell, Maria Lucila; Castillo, Victoria; Cañuelo, Belén; Mata, Dolores de la; García Oro, Gerardo; Grión, Néstor; Juncosa, Federico; Laguinge, Luis |
| Abstract: | This paper examines the impact of an internship program in Argentina (Programa Primer Paso; PPP) on the formal employment trajectories of people with disabilities (PwD). Using administrative data from 2002 to 2023 and a staggered difference-in-differences design, we estimate that program participation increases formal employment and improves employment stability over time. The average probability of being formally employed rises by about 8 percentage points within three years after treatment, with the effect growing over time. The program also increases sustained employment--measured as at least 6 or 12 months of formal work per year--and total months in formal jobs. About three-quarters of the observed employment gains arise from jobs at firms other than the initial internship host, indicating broad integration into the formal labor market, not just formalization of preexisting ties. These results are robust to alternative specifications and pre-trend tests. The effects are larger for individuals residing in the capital city and those placed in medium-sized and large firms, and smaller for individuals with mental disabilities. No clear differences are found by age or gender. We find no evidence of changes in participating firms hiring behavior toward PwD after hosting a PPP intern with a disability. These findings suggest that internship programs can reduce labor market gaps for PwD in developing countries, with patterns consistent with three mechanisms: alleviating informational frictions, raising expectations about employment prospects, and acquiring transferable skills. |
| JEL: | J14 J48 I38 O17 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:idb:brikps:14571 |
| By: | Marchesi, Silvia (Department of Economics at the University of Milano Bicocca, Italy); Ponzo, Michela (Department of Political and Social Sciences, University of Calabria, Italy); Scoppa, Vincenzo (University of Calabria); Spano, Idola Francesca (Department of Economics, Statistics and Finance "Giovanni Anania", University of Calabria) |
| Abstract: | The "Matthew effect" refers to a "rich-get-richer" mechanism whereby early success shapes subsequent achievement. We examine whether this mechanism operates in literary careers by analyzing whether early commercial or critical success leads to cumulative advantages in authors' subsequent works. Using weekly bestseller data for Italian fiction spanning 1975-2025 and exploiting a panel structure at the author-book level, we estimate both baseline OLS models and an Event Study Design. We consider multiple definitions of success, including winning a major literary prize and sustained presence on bestseller lists. Our findings show that prize-based success has virtually no effect on the performance of subsequent books, whereas sustained bestseller success is associated with a small but positive effect on future success. This divergence is likely driven by the fact that literary prizes often induce readers to consume books that fall outside their usual preferences. Our results are robust across alternative specifications, and the positive effect of bestseller success is stronger for younger authors, for women and for books published in more recent decades. |
| Keywords: | Matthew effect, literary careers, consumer decisions, event study design, cultural economics |
| JEL: | L82 Z11 J24 D12 M30 C23 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp18563 |
| By: | Joop Adema; Panu Poutvaara; Cevat Giray Aksoy; Yvonne Giesing |
| Abstract: | Despite rising refugee numbers worldwide, refugees' return decisions remain poorly understood. Prior work examines either intentions or realized return, but not both. We fielded a ten-wave panel of Ukrainian refugees, linking prewar home municipalities to geocoded conflict and territorial control data and eliciting war expectations. Intentions strongly predict behavior: by 2025, 42% of those planning to return soon in 2022 had returned, versus 1% of those planning to settle abroad. Increasing conflict in the home municipality reduces return there but barely affects return to Ukraine overall. More pessimistic war expectations explain 21% of the decline in return intentions. |
| Keywords: | Refugees; Return Migration; Conflict; Ukraine |
| JEL: | D74 F22 J15 J24 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26076 |
| By: | Greta Morando; Lauro Carnicelli |
| Abstract: | The motherhood penalty is a major source of gender inequality, yet it varies substantially across women. We exploit the random gender of the firstborn in Finnish register data to study how parental preferences for family time interact with occupational constraints to generate this heterogeneity. We document a consistent preference for daughters across education groups, reflected in fertility behavior and maternal leave duration. Despite similar preferences, long-run labor market consequences differ sharply by maternal education. Ten years after birth, university-educated mothers experience a 10% larger earnings penalty when their first child is a son, whereas less educated mothers incur a 5% larger penalty when the first child is a daughter. These differences are consistent with lower employment among non-tertiary-educated women and with job sorting into more family-friendly positions among tertiary-educated women following the birth of a firstborn daughter. Our findings show that parental preferences, mediated by education-specific labor market opportunities, generate substantial heterogeneity in the motherhood penalty. |
| Keywords: | Motherhood penalty; gender inequality; parental preferences; child gender; labor-market sorting; work-family balance; education heterogeneity |
| JEL: | J13 J16 J22 J24 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26101 |
| By: | Samuel Dodini; Alexander Willen |
| Abstract: | Economic theory has long linked employer power to discrimination, but theory and empirical applications have seldom considered which form of power matters. We distinguish between labor market and product market power and design our study to isolate the role each plays in allowing discrimination to persist. Our setting leverages job displacements from mass layoffs and firm closures as a source of exogenous job search, combined with exact matching of native–immigrant worker pairs who held the same job at the same firm, in the same occupation, industry, location, tenure and wage prior to displacement. By tracking post-displacement outcomes across labor markets with differing levels of employer concentration, we identify the causal effect of labor market power on discriminatory behavior. We find that wage and employment discrimination against immigrants is amplified in concentrated labor markets and largely absent in highly competitive ones. Product market power has no independent effect, consistent with the idea that wage-setting power is necessary for discriminatory outcomes. Observed gaps fade with sustained employer–immigrant interactions, consistent with belief-based discrimination and employer learning. Together, these findings show that discrimination is not fixed, but shaped by market structure and firm-level dynamics, with implications for both theory and policy design. |
| Keywords: | discrimination; immigration; market power |
| JEL: | J7 J61 J42 J63 |
| Date: | 2026–04–16 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:feddwp:103078 |
| By: | Eduardo Levy Yeyati |
| Abstract: | We study how demographic composition changes the transition costs of rapid automation adoption in a speed–capacity model where displaced workers differ by age and the young share of the displacement pool declines over time. Older workers face higher discouragement hazards and lower retraining completion rates, so demographic aging deteriorates aggregate transition outcomes even when institutional capacity is unchanged—a demographic composition effect. This effect interacts with adoption speed through congestion: fast adoption in an older displacement pool is worse than the sum of its parts (supermodularity). We derive a demographic gradient in optimal adoption speed: the planner adopts faster when the displacement pool is younger. Numerically, in the calibrated region, this demographic gradient becomes steeper when aging is faster. We also identify a demographic buffer: a timing boundary beyond which earlier adoption may dominate delay, although the sufficient condition is quantitatively demanding under OECD-style calibrations. We derive six cross-country predictions and an explicit measurement strategy. |
| Keywords: | AI adoption, demographic aging, labor force participation, retraining, optimal policy |
| JEL: | J24 J26 O33 E24 |
| Date: | 2026–04 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:udt:wpgobi:wp_gob_2026_06 |
| By: | Simon Bensnes; Ingrid Huitfeldt; Edwin Leuven |
| Abstract: | This paper reconciles different approaches to estimating the labor market effects of children. Combining elements from event-study and instrumental-variable estimators we find that while both approaches imply a 15 percent increase in the mother-partner earnings gap ("child penalty"), they differ in what drives this gap. The standard event study attributes it primarily to reduced maternal earnings, but our results suggest maternal changes account for less than half. We show that women time fertility as their earnings profile flattens, causing the event study to overestimate the maternal penalty. This finding has broader implications for event-study designs, as pre-trends may be uninformative about selection bias. |
| Keywords: | Child penalty, female labor supply, event study, instrumental variable |
| JEL: | C36 J13 J16 J21 J22 J31 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26043 |
| By: | Manuel Bagues; Milan Makany; Giulia Vattuone; Natalia Zinovyeva |
| Abstract: | We study how faculty promotion decisions shape women's careers and the academic pipeline, using data from 4, 000 Spanish university departments across all disciplines. We identify exogenous variation in promotions using the random assignment of evaluators to promotion committees between 2002 and 2008: applicants whose committees included a co-author or colleague were significantly more likely to qualify for promotion. We document two main findings. First, failing to obtain tenure has asymmetrically lasting consequences for women. Those who narrowly miss tenure are 57 percentage points less likely to be tenured fifteen years later, compared to 29 percentage points for men. Second, when women do obtain tenure, the effects extend well beyond their own careers: promoting a woman to Associate Professor increases female faculty by 1.5 members after 15 years, leads to six additional female PhD graduates over the following decade, and raises the number who subsequently remain in academia and reach tenured positions. |
| Keywords: | Academic Promotions, Women in Academia, Natural Experiment |
| JEL: | I23 J16 J44 M51 |
| Date: | 2026–03 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26092 |
| By: | Sarah Cattan (Institute for Fiscal Studies, HCEO, IZA, CESifo); Gabriella Conti (University College London, Institute for Fiscal Studies, CEPR, CESifo, CSEF, IZA, RFBerlin); Christine Farquharson (Institute for Fiscal Studies) |
| Abstract: | Early childhood programmes frequently lose effectiveness at scale, yet the role of the workforce remains poorly understood. We document substantial heterogeneity in workforce effectiveness in England’s national home-visiting programme for first-time teenage mothers, despite a highly-structured curriculum and well-qualified staff. Exploiting quasi-random assignment of mothers to family nurses, we estimate that a one standard deviation increase in workforce effectiveness raises children’s cognitive and socio-emotional development by 0.20-0.23 SD. Structural quality—observable worker characteristics —does not predict effectiveness, but process quality —how visits are delivered— does. Greater effectiveness is linked with improvements in maternal mental health and risk behaviours. |
| Keywords: | Early Childhood Development, Home Visiting, Workforce Quality, Process Quality, Scaling, Family Nurse Partnership |
| JEL: | I18 I38 J13 J24 |
| Date: | 2026–04–20 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:sef:csefwp:777 |
| By: | Anne Brenøe; Daphne Rutnam |
| Abstract: | We study how adolescents' second-order beliefs about their parents' occupational preferences shape gendered career aspirations. In a consequential early-career choice setting, we combine a parental choice experiment with a randomized salience intervention among students. Parents give gendered recommendations, but students substantially overestimate fathers' preference for boys to choose male-dominated occupations as well as mothers' preference for girls to choose female-dominated occupations. Making the same-gender parent salient raises aspirations for gender-congruent occupations, while highlighting the opposite-gender parent and both parents has no effect. Salience does not shift perceived occupational fit, suggesting that identity-based second-order beliefs can reinforce occupational gender segregation. |
| Keywords: | gender norms; second-order beliefs; occupational aspirations; parental beliefs; identity and career choice; early-career choices; choice experiment; field experiment |
| JEL: | J16 J24 I21 C93 D91 |
| Date: | 2026–02 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:crm:wpaper:26057 |
| By: | Chomali, Laura; Campaña, Juan Carlos; Molina, José Alberto |
| Abstract: | Gender inequality in unpaid domestic labor persists despite rising female labor market participation across the developing world. Foodwork, understood as cooking, grocery shopping, and dishwashing, links this inequality to household health, with documented connections to dietary quality in a region facing diet-related chronic disease. Telework offers a pathway toward redistribution of these responsibilities. Using time-use data from four Latin American countries and seemingly unrelated regressions, we show that what matters is not whether telework occurs, but who teleworks. Joint telework raises foodwork by up to 250% (Guatemala) and eating time by up to 32% (Chile). Female-exclusive telework produces the sharpest asymmetry: women's foodwork, eating time, and paid hours change by up to 78%, 35%, and 10.3 weekly hours (Chile). Male-exclusive telework yields a smaller reversal: men's foodwork up to 123% (Guatemala), eating time up to 36% (Chile). Policies should prioritize joint and male-inclusive arrangements to generate redistributive effects within couples. |
| Keywords: | Intra-household allocation, Latin America, time use, working from home |
| JEL: | D13 J16 J22 O54 |
| Date: | 2026–04–26 |
| URL: | https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:128883 |